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HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIOLOGY

HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIOLOGY. Prof. Ahmed Mandil Dr. Hafsa Raheel KSU Dept of Family & Community Medicine October 2012. Dr Basmah Almujadidi. Basma.mhm@gmail.com. Objectives. At the end of this lecture, the student should be able to: Describe the current estimates of HIV / AIDS infection

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HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIOLOGY

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  1. HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIOLOGY Prof. Ahmed Mandil Dr. HafsaRaheel KSU Dept of Family & Community Medicine October 2012

  2. DrBasmahAlmujadidi Basma.mhm@gmail.com

  3. Objectives At the end of this lecture, the student should be able to: • Describe the current estimates of HIV / AIDS infection • Understand how people get infected with HIV • Appreciate the features which characterize the pandemic in the Eastern Mediterranean Region • Differentiate what could work best, as far as prevention & control efforts are concerned, in our Region HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  4. What is AIDS ? Acquired Immuno-Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is a severe life-threatening clinical condition, first recognized as a distinct syndrome in 1981. This syndrome represents the late stage of infection with the Human Immuno-deficiency Virus (HIV), which often results in progressive damage of the immune and other organ systems, especially the central nervous system (CNS) HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  5. - Pandemic: all continents, all nations HIV has been isolated from ALL body fluids - There are only three modes of transmission HIV/AIDS PANDEMIC:OVERALL FEATURES HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  6. HIV/AIDS PANDEMIC: OVERALL FEATURES (Continued) - Incubation & communicability: long - Asymptomatic infected (incubating carriers) are capable of transmission of the infection • Impacts of infection: health, social, productivity, • life expectancy, economic, overall development HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  7. HIV Epidemiologic Update -1 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  8. HIV Epidemiologic Update -3 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  9. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  10. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  11. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  12. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  13. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  14. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  15. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  16. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  17. Estimated global distribution of HIV/AIDS infections,by sex (1970s - 2001) 1,000,000 1,000,000 560,000 9.4 Million 440,000 6.1 million 28.1 million 1.82 million 15,000 UNAIDS WHO HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  18. HIV / AIDS Infectious Cycle

  19. HIV/AIDS INFECTIOUS CYCLE -1 Agent: HIV retrovirus, target cell: T4 lymphocyte Reservoir: humans (cases, carriers) Communicability increases with: STI, TB, addiction, repeated contaminated injections / transfusions, sexual promiscuity (frequency, multiple partners) Portal(s) of outlet: semen, vaginal secretions, blood, skin HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  20. HIV/AIDS INFECTIOUS CYCLE -2 Modes of transmission: • Sexual (90 %): hetero- , homo- , bi sexually. • Parenteral (5 %): blood, IDU, skin-piercing • Perinatal (4 %): during pregnancy, labor, milk • Portal of inlet: according to transmission • Susceptibility: general, more among high risk groups especially: TB & STI patients HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  21. HIV Transmission by Efficiency & Global Distribution Exposure Transmission Global Efficiency % Distribution Blood Transfusion > 90 < 1 Perinatal 20 - 45 4 Sexual 0.1 - 1.0 90 IV Drug Abuse0.5 - 1.0 5 Needle-prick < 0.5 < 1 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  22. MODES OF HIV TRANSMISSION (Continued) There is no current evidence to suggest that HIV is transmitted by: • Casual contact • Respiratory route • Enteric route • Insects • Food/water • Toilets • Swimming pools • Seats, door-knobs • Tears • Sharing eating utensils HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  23. HIV / AIDS in the EMR

  24. HIV/AIDS PANDEMIC: EMR FEATURES -1 • Late introduction ( late 1980s), slow progression • By end of 2007, reported low overall prevalence of 0.2 % in EMR nations • Generalized epidemic (> 1 %): in Djibouti, Sudan, some parts of Somalia • Concentrated epidemic (> 5 %): among IDU in Iran, Libya, Pakistan • Age-gender distribution: predominantly affecting adult (91 %) males (71 %) • Modes: mainly heterosexual (77 %); IDU (11 %); blood transfusion (5 %), mother to child (2 %) HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  25. HIV/AIDS PANDEMIC: EMR FEATURES -2 • Current indigenous transmission among high risk groups: IDU, STI patients, T.B. patients, blood recipients, dialyzed patients, prostitutes, imprisoned people, homosexuals (some of whom are underground groups with social / legal difficulties to deal with) - Serious current limitation in deeply needed surveillance activities. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  26. HIV/AIDS PANDEMIC: EMR FEATURES -3 HIV SEROPOSITIVES (2010) Estimate: 470 000 [350 000–570 000] up from 320 000 [190 000–450 000] in 2001 New infections: 59 000 [40 000–73 000] up from 43 000 [31 000–57 000] AIDS related deaths: 35 000 [25 000–42 000] up from 22 000 [9700–38 000] in 2001 STI CASES (2009)(sexually-transmitted infections) Estimate: 10,000,000 cases PROBLEMS:late reporting, under reporting, under diagnosis, conflicts, denial (few states) HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  27. HIV/AIDS PANDEMIC: EMR FEATURES -4 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  28. Middle East and North Africa estimates 1990–2008 Number of people living with HIV Adult (15–49) HIV prevalence (%) 400 0.4 300 0.3 Number(thousands) % 200 0.2 100 0.1 0 0 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 Number of people newly infected with HIV Number of adult and child deaths due to AIDS 50 50 40 40 Number(thousands) Number(thousands) 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 Estimate High and low estimates Source: UNAIDS/WHO Figure 24

  29. Distribution of cumulative AIDS cases by age and by sex WHO / EMR, 1999–2002 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  30. Mode of Transmission of Reported Cases, EMR , 2007 Heterosexual 77 % Homosexual 5 % Perinatal 2 % Blood 5 % IV Drug Abuse 11 % HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  31. HIV in Saudi Arabia-1 • According to information from the National AIDS Control Program (May 2009) the following estimates are provided: • HIV prevalence in adult population: 0.01% • Prevalence among TB patients: Riyadh: 0.30%, (Surveillance reports from 2007) • Prevalence among STI: Riyadh: 2.80%, Jeddah: 1.20%, Dammam: 0.30% HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  32. HIV in Saudi Arabia-2 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  33. HIV / AIDS Prevention & Control

  34. HIV/AIDS Control Bodies Globally: UNAIDS (includes 10 UN agencies); IHRA (International Harm Reduction Association) Nationally:MoH- National AIDS Program (NAP), Multi-sectoral National AIDS Committee (NAC) including: health, education, higher education, information, Islamic Affairs, Sports & Youth Welfare, planning, finance, labor, defense, interior Non-governmental (civil service) organizations HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  35. Global initiative HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  36. MoH - National AIDS Control Program, KSA • Established back in 1986, in response to the emergence of HIV pandemic • Responsible for defining and implementing strategies for preventive and control of HIV/AIDS/STI activities in KSA • Supported by different committees of experts in related aspects • Such program activities are integrated in existing national health system HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  37. To unify the strategy among the GCC countries that combat HIV/AIDS and motivate these countries to deal with HIV/AIDS in a way that goes in line with the global trend of HIV/AIDS prevention and control HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  38. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  39. HIV/AIDS Preventive Measures • Primary: Health education, preventing transmission • Secondary: health education, counseling, health care, support (avoid stigmatization, discrimination), protect society (public health measures) • Tertiary: care for the terminally ill, managing complications and associated conditions HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  40. AIDS management • Anti retroviral treatment (ART) • zidovudine + lamivudine • abacavir + zidovudine + lamivudine • lopinavir + ritonavir • abacavir + lamivudine • tenofovir/emtricitabine • efavirenz + tenofovir/emtricitabine • rilpivirine + tenofovir/emtricitabine • elvitegravir + cobicistat + tenofovir/emtricitabine HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  41. Target Groups for HIV/AIDS Preventive Measures • Vulnerable groups: youngsters & women (in general) but IDU, prisoners, TB & STI patients, homosexuals, prostitutes (in specific) • Other groups: migrant workers, refugees and displaced persons, transport workers, & tourists HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  42. HIV/AIDS Preventive Measures PREVENTION OF SEXUAL TRANSMISSION Global recommendations: abstinence, condom use EMR Recommendations: fostering religion, health education (curricula, information, skills, behavior) dealing with the problem as a social/health issue, use of mass media (advertisements, plays, dialogues) HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  43. HIV/AIDS Preventive Measures PREVENTION OF BLOOD TRANSMISSION • Safety measures & screening at every stage • Voluntary un-paid donors only • Transfusion, only when needed • Careful history-taking and physical examination HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  44. HIV/AIDS Preventive Measures PREVENTION OF PERINATAL TRANSMISSION • Pre-marital counseling • Infected women are advised not to conceive • Use of AZT ( reduces transmission risk by 2/3 ) • In general, breast feeding should be continued • Case-management: compulsory notification HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  45. AIDS must not be allowed to join the long list of problems, like poverty, hunger and ignorance, that the world has learnt to live with, because the powerful have lost interest, and the powerless have no choice. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

  46. References • UNAIDS Report on the global AIDS epidemic. 2011. • UNAIDS Global Report Fact Sheet for Middle East and North AfricA. 2011. • WHO EMRO: AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Diseases: http://www.emro.who.int/asd/index.htm • WHO: HIV/AIDS: http://www.who.int/hiv/en/ • United Nation Development Program: Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: http://www.undp.org.sa/sa/ • National AIDS Control Program: Saudi Arabia. www.unicef.org/gao/Saudi_1.ppt • Saudi Charity Association For AIDS Patients: http://www.saca.org.sa/Action1.htm • Raheel H et al. Sexual practices of young educated men: implications for further research and health education in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA).Journal of Public Health, 2012, pp. 1–6 • Raheel H. Stigma among youth towards People Living with AIDS. Paper presented at XIX International AIDS conference 2012, Washington DC. HIV/AIDS Epidemiology

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